Cook's Cottage, Melbourne — Guia do visitante e o que fazer por perto
Sobre Cook's Cottage
Here's a fact that astonishes most visitors: the quaint stone cottage sitting in Melbourne's Fitzroy Gardens was built in 1755 in the English village of Great Ayton, Yorkshire, over 16,000 kilometres away from where it stands today. And here's the twist: it wasn't actually Captain Cook's house. It was the home of his parents, James and Grace Cook, though young James almost certainly visited. The extraordinary story of how it got to Melbourne begins with Sir Russell Grimwade, who purchased the cottage in 1934 and had it carefully deconstructed brick by brick, packed into 253 cases and 40 barrels, shipped from Hull to Melbourne, and reassembled in Fitzroy Gardens as a gift for Melbourne's centenary celebrations. The logistics alone are staggering: every stone, every timber, every roof tile was numbered, catalogued, and transported halfway around the world before being put back together in its new home. The cottage is now one of Melbourne's most visited attractions, a tangible connection to the 18th-century English village life that Captain Cook grew up around before his voyages changed the map of the world. The surrounding Fitzroy Gardens, with their elm-lined avenues and English-style plantings, provide the perfect setting for a building that was literally transplanted from the English countryside. Questo's Melbourne heritage trail brings you to this remarkable cottage where Yorkshire stone meets Australian soil.
Planeie a sua visita
- Morada
- 5XPH+5Q, East Melbourne VIC 3002, Australia
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